Ocnus.Net
Land For Peace...American Style
By Rob Miller, American Thinker 17/5/09
May 21, 2009 - 11:08:05 AM
Apply the principles urged on Israel to the United States, and you end
up with a scenario something like this:
The new final settlement conference between the US, Mexico, and the
Aztlánistas is scheduled for late June. The agreement promises a new
chapter in the relationship between the countries -- and new hope for
Aztlánista refugees yearning for self-determination and a state of
their own.
For years, there has been ongoing hostilities, massive illegal
immigration and ongoing terrorism on the border. While there are many
troublesome issues, new attitudes on both sides of the conflict may
mean that peace is finally within reach.

The new status quo will probably look very much
like the plan made by New Aztlán advocates like MEChA (and prominent
American academics), tempered with the peace plan promoted by Mexican
President Calderon. Other Latin American countries have endorsed the
plan.
What the Aztlánistas want is final status on a state of their own with
contiguous borders, New Aztlán, to consist of the American territories
of California, Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. The capital of the new
regime will, of course, be traditionally Aztlánista Los Angeles.
All non-Mexican settlements and American settlers would be evacuated
outside these borders to the original pre-1836 lines, with some
modifications, perhaps, to reflect demographics. Part of Northern
California, for instance, could be traded for land in southern Nevada,
eastern Louisiana, Colorado or Utah as part of a final agreement.
A key demand for the Mexicans and the Aztlánistas is justice for the
descendants of the refugees and their descendants dating from the
original American-Mexican conflict. They demand a full right of return
for these refugees and their descendants to Mexican lands still in the
hands of the US. The plan's supporters insist upon a right to settle in
the US for those Mexicans dubbed "illegal aliens" who have been
victimized by what both the Mexicans, th einternational community and
the Aztlánistas denounce as the apartheid border wall and restrictive
US immigration policies.
The proponents of the plan also demand (1)
the agreement must have a deadline for implementation; (2) all
checkpoints within New Aztlán, (especially on the current borders) are
to be removed to allow the Aztlánistas freedom of movement; and (3) US
occupation of New Aztlán must end during the interim before the final
settlement agreement is implemented.
The Aztlánistas are also demanding full sovereignty and control over
historic US sites like the Grand Canyon, the Alamo, and Yosemite.
An important part of the agreement is that all Mexican and Aztlánista
prisoners currently in American custody, who the Aztlánistas consider
to be freedom fighters, will be repatriated to Aztlánista territory.
In exchange for this, the Mexicans, Latin American Nations and
Aztlánistas promise to recognize the remainder of American territory as
the sovereign United States. These parties have agreed to renounce
illegal immigration, terrorism and to dismantle the drug cartels
currently operating out of Mexican and Aztlánista territory.
The problems of a final solution to this problem should not be
underestimated. Right wing ultra-nationalist settlers who consider
these territories part of their historic homeland, regardless of
international law, populate much of the area in question. Resettling
them in the United States within the pre-conflict borders will entail
considerable trouble and expense for the US.
In the territories on the North Bank (AKA Texas) in particular,
opposition to a proposed land for peace settlement is particularly
widespread, not least when it comes to control of the Alamo, which many
settlers consider one of the most important sites in their history. The
Aztlánistas are insisting on total control of the Alamo as part of
their State, claiming that according to their traditions, Aztlánista
hero General Santa Ana tied his horse there before ascending to heaven.
There are also questions of what kind of control the Mexican government
and the Aztlánistas have over groups like the Zetas and MS13 (who are
actually mostly Salvadorans), who have yet to commit to being part of
any settlement and questions of the proponents' ability to prevent
illegal immigration to the US.
Obviously the International community will have to provide substantial
amounts of aid to both Calderon and to the Aztlánistas as part of a
package in order to bolster America's new peace partners. American
critics of the peace negotiations have pointed out that such aid in the
past has largely ended up in the hands of corrupt Aztlánista
politicians, and the money has been used in the past to fund drug
cartels and terrorists organizations like the Zetas. But experts agree
that continued foreign aid would undoubtedly be the necessary "price
for peace" on the part of the US.
As the Aztlánista population grows, time is running out for a
comprehensive settlement. American President Obama has pointed out that
the Latino "demographic bomb" will leave Americans with the option of
either being a minority in their country or foregoing democracy and
permanently occupying the southern territories.
Unless the coming conference ends up with major concessions by the
Americans, an intensified cycle of violence is almost guaranteed. The
Aztlánistas will become more radicalized as they lose hope of reaching
a comprehensive settlement.
But if a final settlement can be agreed on, we may very well be on the
verge of a final two-state solution in the region., and a land for
peace agreement is an essential step towards that goal. Proponents of a
two-state solution have pointed to Oslo and the Gaza disengagement by
Israel as examples of how such a plan can work if it is properly
implemented with the support of the international community.
Most experts in the field contend that the two-state solution is the
only hope of ending the conflict and preserving America's character as
a democratic state.
Source: Ocnus.net 2009